I’ve been staggering with shock lately at the viral firestorm that will clearly be with us long after the NEXT festival is cancelled. There will certainly be no donations to the silent auction ever again. Because zoos and restaurants and museums will be clinging by their fingernails if indeed they manage to survive at all. It’s a dark and terrible time with no hope in sight.
So I comforted myself on working with Chris Jones poem yesterday and was fairly happy with how it came out. Amazing what they let you do with free tools on the internet. I was even happier when he responded overwhelmed and grateful this morning. That makes a nice way to start the day.
I’m sure this will be used by the good folks at the Beaver Trust some way soon. It’s a funny thing. I first began to communicate with Chris when I saw Derek Gow berating him affectionately on FB. Then I learned that his farm is very near where Jon went to school in Cornwall and where his grandfather retired. There are something Facebook is horrible at, but it has a few salient uses.
I was shocked to read Chris’ bio on the beaver trust. Besides being a farmer who also writes poetry he has had an impressive resume, He must be a horse of VERY MANY COLORS indeed.
Chris Jones is a farmer and ecologist based in Mid Cornwall. He has worked as a policeman in Africa, as a forester in SW England, as a drilling fluids engineer in the North Sea, Middle East and Africa, and as a theme running throughout as a farmer in Cornwall. He has been interested in the idea of reintroducing beavers to the UK for many years, and has been practically involved setting up and running the Cornwall Beaver Project with Cornwall Wildlife Trust and Exeter University since 2014.
Oregon is going to KEEP writing letters about beavers until every member of the fish and game department knows how gosh darn upset they are about the decision to allow trapping. This one is from Judith Berg, the author who donated to our festival a few years back.
Thank you for Ernie Niemi’s guest view, “Beavers and the Twisting of Sustainability.” That trappers and hunters get permits to kill our ecosystem engineers “for fun” sends a chilling message to future generations of humans!
I spent most of the 1990s researching river otters in the Colorado Rockies. During that project, beavers emerged as an important player. I showed, as have other researchers throughout the country, that good otter habitat is a cascading consequence of beaver activity. In fact, through complex science, these ecosystem engineers provide habitat for many species of plants, invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals and fish — including Oregon’s beloved salmon. Research conducted in Oregon, Alaska and British Columbia show that juvenile salmon have higher survival rates in streams with beaver ponds.
Researchers continue to discover benefits bestowed by the work of this hardworking, family-oriented species on watersheds throughout the country. With climate change upon us, beavers can help solve many of the problems that affect shifts in wet and dry seasons and wet and dry regions.
Ahh Judith, what an excellent letter! If you haven’t read her many books you should visit them now.
Beavers should be revered for their many contributions to sustainable ecosystems, not killed “for fun” by humans whose existence may ultimately depend on them.
Judith K. Berg, Eugene
Ahh Judith, we couldn’t agree with you more! Very well put. You obviously have given this matter a great deal of thought. As we ALL SHOULD.
Isn’t that beautiful? Great work Annie! And you can see Tim Hon’s amazing mural in full display, Click on the link here to go see the whole searchable poster and read its many salient points about beavers. Let’s all be happy that the hallowed halls of Oxford are getting a complete dose of beavers and call it a Monday, Shall we?
You’ve got to start thinking about this as an ecosystem. All these plantations might as well be growing corn. But if you want clean water, salmon, wildlife, and high-quality lumber, you’ve got to have a forest.” — Mike Fay, a Wildlife Conservation Society biologist and National Geographic Society explorer-in-residence
I met Evan Hayduk, 35, with Mid-Coast Watershed Council when I first moved to the coast from Portland. That was Jan 2019 at Oregon Coast Community College for a dual presentation as part of the Williams Lecture series.
“Shedding a Scientific and Humanitarian Light on Climate Change” was a one-two punch featuring Hayduk alongside Bill Kucha, well-known artist and founder the 350 Oregon Central Coast.
Ooh I have a feeling we read something by Mr. Haeder before. Now that I search I see I did an interview with him after the first beaver conference I attended years ago. Sadly it’s no longer online. But at least I know where I heard his name before! I think we’re going to like this,
“Tidal wetlands are important habitats for salmon and a diversity of other fish and wildlife species,” said Hayduk. “They also trap sediment, buffer coastal communities from flooding and erosion and perform other valued ecosystem services.”
The connection between healthy rivers, functioning floodplains, and healthy fish, Evan emphasizes while putting planting riverbank lupine (Lupinus rivularis) in clusters of four, is trees. I learned much of these interlinked processes while teaching and living in Spokane, working on issues around the Spokane River, a highly urbanized and suburbanized river. Those forested watersheds have much higher water quality. Trees also provide a wide variety of ecological services.
Hmm. I can believe that. I mean it’s. not the answer that springs first to the tongue,t that but were surely going to need the trees if we want that OTHER special angel to come fourth and do his healing works.
Paul: What are the three things you suggest citizens can do to help folks like you and nonprofits like MCWC do what you have to do to protect salmon habitat/refugia?
Evan: A. Help and protect beaver on the landscape. This is #1. Beavers do a better job to create and maintain salmon habitat than we could ever hope to. Tolerate beavers if you live on a property that has a stream. There are beaver solutions that make it easier to “live with beaver.” Inform your neighbors about the importance of beaver and join efforts to stop trapping and killing of this ecosystem engineer.
And SCENE! That’s what we were all waiting for. You know it was coming. Tolerate beavers in the landscape. Stop killing them and let them tend your streams. You will have better salmon, better fish, better wildlife, better water storage, cleaner systems and more life-giving wetlands if you do.
Martinez is boarding itself up in preparation for the riotous hordes that will be protesting downtown on Sunday. Apparently the racist vandalizing couple was on Tucker Carlson this week and now they are full on right wing heroes. Martinez is expecting more heroism this weekend. I can’t wait.
Our neighbor thinks the entire town will be looted and burned to the ground. We’ll see. Since when do looters hit antique stores?
But still there are good things in the world. Take this article from Alabama of all places. I guess I shouldn’t be so surprised.
Beavers have special talents and a never-ending will to dam flowing water. This insatiable desire has tormented the human race for centuries. For the most part, beavers have only done what comes natural to them. It’s man’s desire and actions that has resulted in the ongoing struggle and conflicts between man and beaver.
Granted, beaver activities can interfere with man’s efforts to manage land. For instance, a planted forest or agriculture crop flooded by a newly constructed beaver dam; a manmade pond damaged by beavers undermining the earthen dam; a flooded road resulting from a culvert plugged by beavers, or trees girdled and cut down by beavers for food or materials to repair dam site and home. However, these actions simply result from what a beaver must do to survive.
At this point I was paying attention. Really? From the department of natural resources? Talking about beavers as if they were an actual resource?
In the beaver’s defense, its actions are generally beneficial to the environment. Actually, the beaver can be termed a keystone species. Impoundments created by beavers damming a stream evolve into valuable wetlands that provide habitats that support a complex biodiversity of plant and animal life. In addition, the dam site and created wetland trap sediments, excess nutrients, and pollutants (toxic pesticides and other toxins). These are broken down and decomposed through metabolic processes, resulting in much cleaner water flowing downstream. Beaver ponds also minimize runoff from heavy rainfall easing downstream flooding and soil erosion. Not only does the dam site complex slow the forces of water during periods of heavy rainfall, it also retains a reservoir of water that helps maintain a constant downstream flow during periods of drought.
Beaver ponds increase wildlife carrying capacity by providing a valuable water source during long periods of drought. Rich, moist soils associated with these sites produce an abundance of lush nutritious plant species, which are consumed as food or used for cover by many different wildlife species. There is certainly no dispute the wetlands created by beavers result into a valuable life sustaining ecosystem complex from which our environment greatly benefits.
Get the hell out! I can’t stop blinking in surprise. I guess you really can NOT judge a beaver book by its cover. He starts out fairly cautious describing beavers as ‘generally beneficial’ but then he goes ALL-IN and says the save animals and plants. Is he the loneliest man in the state? Ostracized by all the other biologists at CNR?
Learning to live with beavers is usually the best way to retain peace of mind and reconcile human and beaver conflicts. Removing beavers entirely from an area is very difficult and, if accomplished, it is a good bet that the unoccupied wetland will be inhabited by other beavers living up or down stream from the site.The total removal of beavers can result in the loss of very beneficial wildlife habitat.
Flooded property or roads may be easily corrected by the installation of a cost effective beaver flooding control device.If it is impossible for you to “leave it to beaver,” call your nearest Alabama Division of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries district office for help.
I need to sit down. I’m feeling faint. Can someone get me a glass of water? Rick is obviously a southern visionary who gets a Worth A Dam tee shirt. By way of explanation I will say two things. That Alabama is the site of the most famous lawsuit for removing a beaver dam with the notorious case of the watercress darter AND that when I researched Mr. Claybrook’s history on the google I found ANOTHER incident of his speaking up for beavers in 2009. Guess where that article was? Hmm the Worth A Dam beaver hotline of course.
The latest edition of Outdoor Alabama, a magazine published by the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, contained an exceptionally well-written and informative article about beavers. The author, Rick Claybrook, is a wildlife biologist with the department.
Claybrook recognizes and elaborates on the positive influences beavers have on our environment. The impoundments their dams create allow for settlement of silt and sediment that would otherwise contaminate the downstream segments of the streams. I am reasonably certain that the quality of the water downstream from a beaver pond is substantially higher than that flowing into the pond.
First of all WOW Rick, you are a beaver believer from way back! Practically a founding father! And second of all MY GOD I”VE BEEN DOING THIS FOR A LONG TIME.